Mar 11, 2021
Mike Coleman
CHARLESTON â A decorated former West Virginia correctional officer, who worked his way up the ranks to acting commissioner, is now leading the newest agency within the Department of Homeland Security.
Mike Coleman, formerly executive assistant to the warden at Mount Olive Correctional Complex, has been appointed director of the Division of Administrative Services by Homeland Security Secretary Jeff Sandy.
Administrative Services was created when the state consolidated its prison, jail and juvenile systems in 2018. A model for effective streamlining across state government, it handles the array of functions common to state agencies including human resources, payroll, recruiting, contracts and procurement, and vehicle and property management within DHS.
Date Time
Share
New technology to revolutionise home care delivery as Royal Commission calls for urgent transformation in aged care
Lookout + Five Good Friends
A new customer-focused digital care management solution that enables home care organisations to deliver better care has been developed by one of Australia’s leading home care providers.
Following the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety handing down its final report, Five Good Friends has released the new software solution, Lookout, built on their experience operating a digitally enabled home care business.
CEO Simon Lockyer says “Lookout is the only digital care management platform built by care, for care. We believe it will transform the home care sector.”
Close
A bill speeding through the Legislature would further weaken landmark chemical tank safety rules â passed after the 2014 spill at Freedom Industries near Charleston that contaminated drinking water for 300,000 people (pictured) â by excluding the natural gas industry from the regulation. Another measure moving through the legislative process would update pollution standards to allow industries to release higher amounts of some types of chemicals.
File photo
By Erin Beck
Mountain State Spotlight Mar 11, 2021
Mar 11, 2021
A bill speeding through the Legislature would further weaken landmark chemical tank safety rules â passed after the 2014 spill at Freedom Industries near Charleston that contaminated drinking water for 300,000 people (pictured) â by excluding the natural gas industry from the regulation. Another measure moving through the legislative process would update pollution standards to allow industries to release hi